This product does not emit light of its own, so the standard review format will not be used and the product will not be assigned a rating. This website is mostly about light-emitting products and test equipment I regularly use, but occasionally, you'll see non-light emitting products on it too if it's something I really like or use frequently.
(This product can indeed be used as a short-range flashlight to illuminate keyholes or to help locate dropped objects within close proximity to {near} you).

This is the Kyocera cellular telephone handset. It is a fairly standard "flip fone", in which a lid over the display & keypad flips open on a hinge to expose the keypad; the video display is on the inner surface of the lid itself.

The unit came with "pay as you go" cellular service from Virgin Mobile.

SIZE

Use the Marbl like you might use any other cellular telephone: dial the number you want, then press the "talk" key (this key shows a standard telephone handset lifted off the cradle and tilted at an angle -- the telephone handset shown is colored green). When finished with the call, press the "end" key (this key shows a standard telephone handset lying in the cradle; it is not tilted at all -- the telephone handset shown is colored red).

I don't feel like writing a book today, so you'll want to refer to the instructional materials that are furnished with the handset to read about its many other features.

The LCD screen of this telephone in "standby" mode (after you flip it open but before you dial).

Note that the date is indicated as "12/32/09" - it automatically corrected
itself to read "01/01/10" shortly after this photograph was taken.

This is another "standby" screen - the one I currently (as of 03-08-10) use.

Spectrographic analysis of the LCD screen displaying "white".

Spectrographic analysis of the blue LEDs in the keypad of this handset.

Audio file (.WAV format) of one of the ringtones (the one I prefer out of the several that are available on the handset).

This file is ~0.140 megabytes (142,798 bytes) in length; dial-up users please be aware.
It will take no less than thirty seconds to download at 48.0Kbps.

TEST NOTES:
Cellular telephone handset was purchased in early-2009 in Federal Way WA. after it was determined that my "California" cellular telephone handset would not function here because there are no cell towers for the MetroPCS service I had been using prior to moving here.

This product was POSSIBLY manufactured in Brazil.
A product's country of origin really does matter to some people, which is why I published it on this web page.

Do you manufacture or sell an LED flashlight, task light, utility light, or module of some kind?
Want to see it tested by a real person, under real working conditions? Do you then want to see how your light did? If you have a sample available for this type of
real-world, real-time testing, please contact me at ledmuseum@gmail.com.

Unsolicited flashlights, LEDs, and other products appearing in the mail are welcome, and it will automatically be assumed that you sent it in order to have it tested and evaluated for this site.
Be sure to include contact info or your company website's URL so visitors here will know where to purchase your product.